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Implication of Digital Development on Connectivity and Market
Xuehui Han, Senior Economist, AIIB
November 2018
1The views expressed in this presentation are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views and polices of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.
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• Case 1: Autonomy of Monetary Policy:• Effectiveness of Capital Control.
• Case 2: International tourists market and air traffic infrastructure• Environmental impact mitigation;• Regulation improvement.
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Outline
Case 1:Autonomy of Monetary Policy
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• Do Developing Countries Have to Import the US Monetary Policies?
The original framework of the Trilemma:
• Fixed exchange rate, Free Capital Flow, and Sovereign Monetrary Policy cannot be achieved simultaneously.
The alternative framework of the Trilemma:
• Flexible exchange rate regimes produce monetary policy autonomy, such as, Obstfeld (2015).
• Capital controls are ineffective.
Based on the results from Han, Xuehui & Wei, Shang-Jin, 2018. "International transmissions of monetary shocks: Between a trilemma and a dilemma," Journal of International Economics, Elsevier, vol. 110(C), pages 205-219.
Competing recommendations:
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• For emerging markets: prioritize exchange rate flexibility (e.g., IMF’s Article IV reports on the People’s Republic of China, 2014).
• Only capital controls confer real monetary autonomy Chinn and Wei (2013) and Rey (2013).
Empirical investigation
• Does a flexible exchange rate regime really confer monetary policy autonomy?
• Capital control or flexible exchange rate regime, which one is more effective?
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The methodology for the investigation
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Monetary policy of country k
Part I linked to domestic need
Part II reflecting response to US monetary policy
Part III reflecting global risk appetite
= + +
Based on domestic
growth and inflation
Could be affected by a
country’s nominal
exchange rate regime and
capital controls regime
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-2 -1 0 1
-3-2
-10
12
3Without Capital Control
-2.0 -1.5 -1.0 -0.5 0.0 0.5 1.0
-3-2
-10
12
3
With Capital Control
Fix
ed E
xch
ang
e R
ate
-2 -1 0 1
-3-2
-10
12
3
-2.0 -1.5 -1.0 -0.5 0.0 0.5 1.0
-3-2
-10
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Fle
xib
le E
xch
ang
e R
ate
US Policy Rate Changes in %
Pe
riph
era
l Pol
icy
Rat
e C
ha
nges
in %
• Capital controls enable the periphery countries to be fully immune to the interest rate changes in the US.
• Without capital controls, peripheral countries with fixed exchange rate regime have to “import” the monetary policy of the US whereas the ones with flexible exchange rate regime only go together with the US for easing episodes rather than the tightening periods.
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Effectiveness of the policies in the traditional framework
Using Blockchain and Distributed Ledgers for the Cross-border Payments
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• Traditional SWIFT cross-border payment.
Source: Infosys, white paper on Cross-border money transfer using Blockchain – enabled by Big Data.
• Cross-border payment using blockchain.
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Source: Infosys, white paper on Cross-border money transfer using Blockchain – enabled by Big Data.
Implications:
• The blockchain or distributed ledger will weaken the capital controls, equivalent to non-capital control scenario.
• Leave the monetary policy choice of flexible exchange rate regime as the only tool to be immune to the interest rate hikes of core countries:
• For a periphery country with a fixed exchange rate: • An increase/decrease in the interest rate by 66 basis points with 100-
basis-points changes in the US interest rate.
• For a periphery country with a flexible exchange rate: • No impact when the US interest rate increases;
• A 63-basis-points decrease with 100 basis points decrease in the US interest rate.
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Case 2: International tourists market and air traffic infrastructure
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Methodology:
• A gravity model using the bilateral cross-border visitors as the dependent variables.
• Three groups of explaining variables:• GDP per capita and population of departure
countries;• Distance, culture factors, and regulation factors;• Airports, air routes, and visas.
Based on the results from Han, Xuehui, Airports, Airlines and Visas: Factors Shaping Cross Border Tourism, AIIB Working Paper, forthcoming.
Booming of international tourism
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• The countries in Asia and the pacific have observed a growth rate at 7.2% per annum in international visitors, reaching almost 400 million in 2016. The share of Asia and the Oceania in international tourism also increased from 18% in 1995 to more than 30% in 2016.
• China has the largest number of foreign visitors at 59.3 million, followed by Thailand (32.5 million), Turkey (30.3 million), Malaysia (26.8 million), and Hong Kong SAR (26.6 million). , Bhutan shows the fastest growth: from 2006 to 2016, the international arrivals increased by 11 times.
Source: author calculation based on WDI data
Top 20 airports in passengers: 2016 vs. 2006
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NEWARKNJ(EWR)DETROITMI(DTW)
PHOENIXAZ(PHX)HOUSTONTX(IAH)
NEWYORKNY(JFK)
BANGKOK(BKK)HONGKONG(HKG)
LASVEGASNV(LAS)MADRID(MAD)
AMSTERDAM(AMS)
DENVERCO(DEN)BEIJING(PEK)
FRANKFURT(FRA)
PARIS(CDG)DALLAS/FORTWORTHTX(DFW)
LOSANGELESCA(LAX)
TOKYO(HND)LONDON(LHR)
CHICAGOIL(ORD)ATLANTAGA(ATL)
0 25 50 75 100Passengers in million
DummyAsia
Asia
Non-Asia
Top 20 Airports in Passengers for 2006
INCHEON, KR (ICN)JAKARTA, ID (CGK)
DENVER CO, US (DEN)SINGAPORE, SG (SIN)
NEW YORK NY, US (JFK)
GUANGZHOU, CN (CAN)ISTANBUL, TR (IST)
FRANKFURT, DE (FRA)AMSTERDAM, NL (AMS)
DALLAS/FORT WORTH TX, US (DFW)
PARIS, FR (CDG)SHANGHAI, CN (PVG)
HONG KONG, HK (HKG)
LONDON, GB (LHR)CHICAGO IL, US (ORD)
TOKYO, JP (HND)
LOS ANGELES CA, US (LAX)DUBAI, AE (DXB)
BEIJING, CN (PEK)ATLANTA GA, US (ATL)
0 25 50 75 100Passengers in million
Dummy.Asia
Asia
Non-Asia
Top 20 Airports in Passengers for 2016
Source: author calculation based on ACI traffic data.
Empirical findings in the traditional framework
• Soft and hard air infrastructures significantly help promoting cross-borders tourism:
• The number of airports in departure and destination countries;
• The visa exemptions in departure and destination countries;
• The availability of bilateral air routes.
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Digitalization and Big data can help
• Efficiently planning the flight routes to reduce the fuel consumption and CO2 emission;
• Avoiding flying over the densely habited areas and reducing noise;
• Optimally choosing the locations of new airports;
• Efficiently employing the surrounding transportation network;
• Simplifying the visa approval procedures.
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Figure 1. International Air Routes from the Top 10 Airports
Implications:
• A country with visa application procedure digitized, which improves the ranking of the country with regards to visa exemptions from sample mean of 58 to 48, A 0.6% increase in international tourists will be induced;
• With digitalized planning, a 10% increase in provision of routes in either the departure or the destination country will induce an increase of the international visitors by 7.4%;
• Translating the routes to distance shortened, a 10% increase in the routes is equivalent to an average of 4,816 kilometers distance shortened between each pair of two countries, which is around the distance between Singapore and Beijing.
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THANK YOU.LET’S CREATE TOMORROW.
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Contact
Xuehui HanSenior Economist
AIIBB-9 Financial Street Xicheng District Beijing, China100033